Peter Tomich
Petar Herceg 'Tonić' | |
---|---|
![]()
Chief Watertender Peter Tomich
| |
Born | (1893-06-03)June 3, 1893 Prolog, Ljubuški, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Austria-Hungary |
Died | December 7, 1941(1941-12-07) (aged 48) Pearl Harbor, Territory of Hawaii |
Allegiance | ![]() |
Service/ | ![]() ![]() |
Years of service | 1917–1919 (Army) 1919–1941 (Navy) |
Rank | Chief Watertender (Navy) |
Unit | USS Litchfield (DD-336) USS Utah (BB-31) |
Battles/wars | World War I World War II |
Awards | ![]() |
Petar Herceg 'Tonić' (later anglicizedasPeter Tomich; June 3, 1893 – December 7, 1941) was a United States Navy sailor of Herzegovinian Croat descent who received the United States military's highest award, the Medal of Honor, for his actions in World War II.[1]
Tomich was an ethnic Croat from Herzegovina born as Petar Herceg (family nickname 'Tonić') in Prolog near Ljubuški, Austro-Hungarian rule in Bosnia and Herzegovina. He immigrated to the United States in 1913, and joined the US Army in 1917.[2]
Tomich served in the US Army during World War I, and enlisted in the US Navy in 1919, where he initially served on the destroyer USS Litchfield (DD-336).[1]
By 1941, he had become a chief watertender on board the training and target ship USS Utah.[1] On December 7, 1941, while the ship lay in Pearl Harbor, moored off Ford Island, she was torpedoed during Japan's raid on Pearl Harbor.[1] Tomich was on duty in a boiler room. As Utah began to capsize, he remained below, securing the boilers and making certain that other men escaped, and so lost his life.[1] For his "distinguished conduct and extraordinary courage" at that time, he posthumously received the Medal of Honor.[1] His Medal of Honor was on display at the Navy's Senior Enlisted Academy (Tomich Hall).[1] Later, the decoration was presented to Tomich's family on the aircraft carrier USS Enterprise in the southern Adriatic city of SplitinCroatia, on 18 May 2006, sixty-four years after US President Franklin D. Roosevelt awarded it to him.[3]
![]() | ||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
For distinguished conduct in the line of his profession, and extraordinary courage and disregard of his own safety, during the attack on the Fleet in Pearl Harbor by the Japanese forces on 7 December 1941. Although realizing that the ship was capsizing, as a result of enemy bombing and torpedoing, Tomich remained at his post in the engineering plant of the U.S.S. Utah, until he saw that all boilers were secured and all fireroom personnel had left their stations, and by so doing lost his own life."[4]